Is Privacy Overrated?
The merits, drawbacks, and inevitability of the surveillance nation
by KATHERINE MANGU-WARD
Reason, January 9, 2007
"Have you ever attended a political event? Sought
treatment from a psychiatrist? Had a drink at a gay bar? Visited a fertility clinic?"
A report on the proliferation of surveillance cameras-more than 4,200 below 14th
street-from the New York Civil Liberties Union asks: Would you have done those things if
you had known you were being watched?
The answer, for most people, is yes. Though we may shy
away from the idea of someone spying on our private lives, most people believe that we
live in a country where rights are generally respected, and so we go about our business
without fear. However, the report notes:
There is only limited recognition in the law that there
are some places into which a surveillance camera is not allowed to intrude. And there are
virtually no rules that prohibit police or private entities from archiving, selling or
freely transmitting images captured by a video surveillance camera. The courts have yet to
address the fundamental privacy and associational rights implicated by the phenomenon of
widespread video surveillance.
In short, they're worried about what will happen when New
Yorkers no longer have an expectation of some degree of privacy in the public sphere. And
they're right: There is almost no privacy left in America, especially in cities. Sooner or
later, you won't be able to go anywhere without being tracked.
Debate about the use and abuse of surveillance cameras is
worthwhile, but it is also worth keeping in mind the ways in which we benefit from the
death-by-a-thousand-cuts that privacy suffers every day. While raising legitimate concerns
about the camera boom in New York, the report ignores the significant gains to consumers
living in a transparent society--both convenience and security--and the ways in which
proliferation of video surveillance public and private can protect citizens from police
misbehavior or other miscarriages of justice (for a more thorough look at the upside of
zero privacy, see Declan McCullagh's cover article in the June 2004 isssue of reason.)
Let's revisit the frightening picture painted by the New
York Civil Liberties Union. For a session at the psychiatrist's office or the fertility
clinic, you would have paid with a credit card, right? If you bought a round of drinks at
the gay bar, would you have hesitated to hand your card to the bartender, even to leave it
with him to run a tab? To get there, you might have taken the subway using your
registered, traceable Metro card. Or perhaps you drove, zipping past tollbooths in an EZ
Pass lane, pitying the poor suckers waiting to pay with old-fashioned, anonymous cash. If
you were concerned about getting lost, you could have used your phone's GPS, leaving a
wake of signals and records about your location and habits.
Perhaps you would have stopped to pick up some cash at an
ATM before your outing. There, you would have created another digital record, stamped with
the time and place of your withdrawal in the bank's records. And that mirror above the ATM
where you checked out your hair? It's concealing a camera, there to protect you from
anyone inspired to lift your newly-acquired cash or force you to take out more at
gunpoint, or at least help identify and catch the mugger later. ATM cameras have been in
general use for many years.
Your credit card, EZ Pass, and bank records can all be
subpoenaed when necessary. So do a few thousand city cameras really represent a new
invasion of our privacy? Hardly. My credit card company has long known where I buy
underwear, but I don't lay awake nights worried that prosecutors might demand knowledge of
my preferences in skivvies. The ways in which that information can be accessed by the
state are circumscribed by decades of legal precedent. We should remain vigilant that
those precedents aren't eroded, and we should work to strengthen protections where
necessary, but the collection of the information in itself is an unstoppable force, mostly
for good--I like that I can sift thorough records ofeverything I have purchased
in the last three years.
New York already boasts three or four thousand cameras,
mostly private, and the number will only continue to grow. The biggest boom will be in
government cameras, though. The New York City police recently announced plans to create
a citywide system of closed-circuit televisions operated from a central
control center, funded primarily by federal anti-terrorism money.
Admittedly, this is where the surveillance nation gets
dicey. Concerns about misuse of public cameras by authorities are reasonable and
violations should be punished--there are several cases wending their way through the
courts now which are expected to set standards for how severely abuse of video can be
punished, and what the proper parameters are for its use. But much of the abuse of the
cameras often takes innocuous forms: a deputy police commissioner rewinding tape to locate
his lost keys or keeping an eye on his kids as they walk home from school. This type of
behavior should not be confused with serious infractions.
And of course, cameras can and should also protect
citizens from police misbehavior. Several protesters at the 2004 Republican convention in
New York, for example, have beaten charges of resisting arrest with video evidence from
private and public cameras. A few more cameras on the street when police fired 50 rounds
at Sean Bell in Queens might have helped determine what really happened on the night of
November 25th.
There have been several smaller occasions where
do-it-yourself video privacy violations have paid off, as in the case of recent LAPD
brutality caught on a mobile phone or handheld camera. Think Rodney King meets YouTube. In
these cases, private cameras provided a check on police. Added surveillance of police also
carries another benefit: police are smart enough to know to be careful when they are being
taped, even when they're being taped by their own colleagues. The report relates an
interview with off-duty police officers at a labor demonstration. "A special NYPD
unit was assigned to film the police officers as they demonstrated. 'Thats Big
Brother watching you,' said one police demonstrator outside Gracie Mansion. Said another:
' sends a chill down a police officers back to think that Internal Affairs would be
taping something.'"
Police concerned about who's watching them will generally
be police more prone to good behavior.
More worrying than the boom in public cameras, though, is
a recent proposal to require New York's hundreds of night clubs to install cameras on the
premises. When businesses chose to install cameras for their own purposes, the cameras
usually benefit consumers in the long run--with increased security or convenience. But
when the city mandates the installation of private cameras, patrons are less likely to
benefit. Such mandates can and should be fought as infringements on privacy and property.
Whether or not cameras deter illegal behavior is a
legitimate debate, and it's true that cameras in the London subways system didn't deter
bombers in July 2005. But perhaps it should have-the video footage led to the speedy
identification and capture of the four bombers . The next terrorists (those not hoping for
72 virgins, anyway) might be inclinded to rethink their plans.
If you're inclined to avoid the cameras, go ahead. Here's
a map of the known cameras in the city to help you plan your route or figure out which way
to angle your fedora to shade your face. The NYCLU report is concerned that the cameras
are often disguised, that they "remain hidden to the untrained eye." But in the
same sentence, the report notes that "the corner deli" or other shopkeepers
often operate cameras. Small shopkeepers have been using security cameras for many years,
but even the most paranoid among us still go in to pick up some beef jerky when we pay for
our gas. Our behavior suggests that we are already at peace with having our images
captured on video.
Of course, issues like required surveillance on private
property and protections for citizens who want to film police should be aired in the
public square. Police occasionally arrest bystanders for taping a police encounter, an
activity that should clearly be protected. But the debate shouldn't ignore the fact that
the kind of personal privacy many worry about losing to street corner cameras has already
mostly been lost to credit cards, EZ Passes, and cameras in your ATM or deli. And more
cameras and records, not fewer, may be the best guarantee against abuse of police power in
the age of zero privacy.